![]() On the new podcast, Spence said none of the voice services Sonos has approached - “we’ve been talking to everybody,” he said coyly when asked for specifics - has demanded exclusivity. ![]() You can listen to the new podcast on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Pocket Casts, Overcast or wherever you listen to podcasts. With voice services, I see it developing very similarly.” My spouse uses a different one than I do, my children use a different one. “We know, in the home, there’s multiple music services used. “This is a difference versus the mobile space, where it’s a very personal device, you’re going to use one set of services that matter to you,” Spence said. One of the company’s strongest advantages, he said, is that its newer hardware - such as the voice-enabled Sonos One - can work with multiple virtual assistants, the same way all Sonos speakers can access multiple competing music services. Indeed: Amazon made a splash in 2015 with the Amazon Echo line of speakers, which let users talk to its virtual assistant, Alexa Google responded with the Google Home product line, which talks to Google Assistant and next week, Apple is scheduled to release its own smart speaker, HomePod, which works with Siri.īut Spence doesn’t worry that Sonos’ customers are going to jump ship. I was joking with the team, the reward for having disrupted the space over the last decade is to get to compete with Apple and Google and Amazon.” “There were a lot of people, back when we started, saying, ‘There’s no way you could ever compete with Bose and Sony,’ the heavyweights of audio at the time,” Sonos CEO Patrick Spence said on the latest episode of Too Embarrassed to Ask. Over the past 16 years, the wireless speaker company Sonos has had to contend with a parade of naysayers who thought competitors would knock it out.
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